‘CBI fabricated our statements’

Mumbai, June 6 — The trial in the murder of the president of the Jalgaon District Congress Committee, Vishram Patil, has taken a new turn. Some of the witnesses, including a prosecution (panch) witness, have filed affidavits alleging that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) fabricated their statements attached to the CBI’s additional chargesheet filed on June 10, 2006.

Vishram was murdered on September 21, 2005. Political rivalry between him and party colleague, G.N. Patil, President Pratibha Patil’s brother, and another party member, Ulhas Patil, was suspected to be the reason for the murder.

Vishram’s widow, Rajni Patil, had moved the high court and the Supreme Court to make G.N. Patil an accused in the murder. An affidavit filed by Rekha Mali (wife of accused Raju Mali, who died in custody in 2007) alleged that the CBI and police fabricated her statement.

“CBI officers visit me and threaten me and my relatives. They ask me to give my statement according to what they say.

If anything happens to me, the CBI should be held responsible,” Rekha’s affidavit said. A senior CBI official confirmed these affidavits were filed.

“We will follow the process of law and file a reply if the court asks us to,” the officer said. The affidavit of Kishor Shah, one of the witnesses, said the police had approached him to be a panch witness.

“The police threatened me saying if I didn’t help them they would make me an accused in the case,” Shah’s affidavit said. Raju’s brother, Sanju, said the CBI had attached his statement with the chargesheet without recording it.

Rekha’s affidavit also said her husband had connections with politicians but nobody helped her. She claimed she had gone to meet G.N. Patil who asked her to return after 90 days.

Two teenagers await news of their parents

Mumbai, May 29 — The Sawaliwalas were sipping their morning tea and watching the news on television when news of the derailment of the Howrah-Kurla Gyaneshwari Express began flashing on screen. Hamir Sawaliwala (45) and his wife Asha (41) were on that train. They were returning to Mumbai. “I just hope my brother is alive somewhere,” said Hamir’s cousin, Ajay Panicker (28), a customer care executive with Mitashi. The Sawaliwalas lived in Tilak Nagar near Chembur with their two teenaged children, Dhaval and Archana, both college students. Hamir worked with an advertising agency. The couple had left for Kolkata 10 days ago to attend a family function. “Several relatives of Asha are in Kolkata and they had planned a get-together. They left the children in Mumbai because their classes were about to begin,” Panicker said. Until afternoon, the Sawaliwala family had only received news that Asha was injured but stable. “I had contacted my relatives at Kolkata who found out that my sister-in-law is being treated at a hospital,” said Panicker. But there was no news of Hamir. “There is lot of confusion here,” said Panicker, a resident of Chembur. “I have been waiting at the terminus since morning and I still don’t have a clear picture about Hamir’s whereabouts.” Panicker contacted the Kolkata service centre and found that Hamir’s name was on the first list of injured passengers. At Lokmanya Tilak Terminus, however, his name does not figure even in the second list. “They have not even released the names of the deceased,” said an annoyed Panicker.

Panicker had last spoken to Hamir on Thursday night. “Hamir had called to inform me that he was boarding the train at Howrah. We spoke every day,” he said.

Frantic search for brother ends in relief

Mumbai, May 29 — “It’s God’s grace,” said Jagdish Ray. Thirty-seven-year-old Ray, a Kolkata-based software engineer who was visiting Mumbai for work, was relieved to know his younger brother, Sandip, had survived the accident involving the Howrah-Mumbai Gyaneshwari Express at West Midnapore on Friday. Sandip (33), a Commerce graduate, was coming to Mumbai for an interview. He was travelling in coach A1. Jagdish had a tough time all morning trying to find out whether his brother was safe. “I have been frantically trying to contact anybody who could help me with updates on my brother,” Jagdish said. Jagdish had boarded the same train on Wednesday and was to reach Lokmanya Tilak Terminus on Friday morning. “My train was on the outskirts of Mumbai when I learnt about the derailment from my fellow passengers. I realised that Sandip was on the same train,” Jagdish said. “I was hoping Sandip had missed the train.”

Sandip’s relatives managed to trace him among the injured. “I was relieved when they informed me that Sandip had sustained injuries but was safe. I told my relatives to admit him to a private hospital,” he said, adding he would fly to Kolkata soon.

A deafening sound, silence, then another crash

West Midnapore, May 29 — Sukumar Banerjee’s five relatives, including two children aged five and ten years, died in Friday’s mishap. They were all in S5, one of the four derailed bogies of Gyaneshwari Express that were crushed by the goods train, but Banerjee was some distance away from them, at one end of the bogie. That’s why he is alive. Banerjee (49) along with the family members of his two brothers-in-law was going to attend a sacred thread ceremony of another relative in Rourkela. While Banerjee is a resident of Nadia district, his relatives were from Domkol in West Bengal’s Murshidabad district. “My younger brother-in-law had booked all their tickets in April while I booked it in May. This made the difference,” he said. “While they got their berths together I was separated. Their berths were from 33 to 36, while mine was 63,” Banerjee said, with bleary eyes. “They are all dead.” Like most other passengers they had gone to sleep before 12am. Around 12.35 am, the train reached Kharagpur. Everything seemed normal. Around 1.15 am, Banerjee heard a loud sound and fell off his seat. “I could feel that the train had turned on its side and was dragging along the tracks,” he said. Passengers screamed for help. The bogie dragged for what seemed like a couple of minutes before it came to a halt, he said. Then, a few seconds of silence, Banerjee recalled.

It was after many more minutes that he would start counting those he had lost.

Couple stoned to death in Andhra Pradesh

Hyderabad, May 27 (IANS) A couple, who had eloped and married, was stoned to death in what appears to be a case of honour killing in Andhra Pradesh’s Nizamabad district.

Irate residents of Krishnajivadi village rained stones on the couple after tying them to a pole, police said Thursday.

The macabre incident occurred late Wednesday night in Telangana region, about 250 km from here.

Sunkara Srinivas, 32, belonging to the Scheduled Caste (SC), and 22-year-old Swapna Reddy, belonging to an upper caste, had eloped and married six months ago.

Swapna’s family was against the alliance as Srinivas was from a lower caste and already married. He had two children from his first wife.

The newly married couple lived in Hyderabad for sometime as Srinivas was working as a computer operator in a private firm.

They returned to the village three days ago. Swapna’s relatives called the couple on the pretext of discussing some issues. Following an argument, they started thrashing Srinivas and when Swapna tried to protect him, they attacked her as well.

The couple was then tied to a pole and the attackers, numbering about 30, pelted stones on them leading to their death.

Police has registered a case and arrested three people.

Suspected militants kidnap forest services officer in Arunachal Pradesh

Pune, May 15 (ANI): Militants have kidnapped Vilas Bardekar, a senior Indian Forest Services (IFS) officer in Arunachal Pradesh”s West Kameng District.

Bardekar, who hails from Pune, was reportedly kidnapped on Thursday.

He had been to the Daimara Reserved Forest Region in West Kameng District of Arunachal to click pictures of butterflies.

Consequently, his relatives and close associates refused to disclose any details to the media as they said they have been advised not to comment or else it might turn fatal.

Bardekar, an IFS cadre of the 1984 batch, is posted as the Joint Director of Social Forestry in Maharashtra.

Security forces have launched a search operation. (ANI)

Dutch boy unaware of being lone Libyan plane crash survivor

Tripoli (Libya), May 14 (ANI): Nine-year-old Dutch boy Ruben van Assouw managed to make it out of the crashed Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771 with two broken legs, but what he does not know still is that he is the only one to have survived out of the 104 on board.

The boy”s aunt and uncle, who traveled to Tripoli from the Netherlands to bring him home, visited his hospital room on Thursday morning.

He immediately recognized them and smiled when they came in, according to Dutch officials.

“His memory is good: as soon as his relatives walked in he smiled, and was happy to see them,” Dr. Siddiq ben Dilla was quoted by a foreign news agency, as saying.

Dutch Foreign Ministry official Ed Kronenburg said the boy remains dizzy from the after-affects of anesthesia.

“He hasn”t been told yet, as far as we know, that his parents died,” he added.

He may go home as soon as the weekend.

Dutch officials said the family has asked the media to leave them alone, despite the global interest in and sympathy for the miracle survivor. (ANI)

Tribal elders asked to expel Pak Taliban living as IDPs

Peshawar, May 12 (ANI): The Pakistani authorities have sought help from elders of the Ahmedzai Wazir tribes to oust the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan terrorists, living with families and posing as internally displaced people (IDP) from South Waziristan.

The authorities demanded immediate ouster of TTP cadres from Wana and other towns, officials and tribal chieftains said on Tuesday.

“We have reports that the Mehsud militants have been staying with their relatives and posing as IDPs, who have been provided shelter by the Ahmedzai Wazirs in Wana and other towns,” Wana Assistant Political Agent Ghafoor Shah told a jirga of Ahmedzai Wazir elders.

The Daily Times quoted a tribal elder as saying that the government expressed the concern at the presence of Mehsud Taliban in Ahmedzai Wazir areas where security situation was better than other tribal regions since Mullah Nazir ousted foreign terrorists, especially the Uzbeks in 2007.

“We have already talked to Mullah Nazir and he is very much against the presence of Mehsud commanders or foot soldiers disguised as IDPs.

“There is complete unanimity among all stakeholders that we should be on high alert against these militants,” the tribal elder said on conditions of anonymity.

The officials said intelligence agencies picked up the movement of Mehsud Taliban visiting their relatives staying with Ahmedzai Wazir families and “we fear these Mehsud militants may attempt to disturb the peaceful environment in these areas.”

The tribal elder said the Mehsud families had come from Tiarza area and settled with friends in Shakai Valley, Wana and other towns. (ANI)

Centre okays visa for Prabhakaran mother

In a careful move, the Union Government accorded sanction to Parvathiammal, the ailing mother of slain LTTE chief V Prabhakaran, to visit Tamil Nadu on a six-month visa, even as it placed riders to ensure that the pro-Tiger outfits did not draw mileage out of her presence.

Parvathiammal had arrived at the Chennai airport from Malaysia on the night of April 16 on a valid medical visa, but was immediately deported by the immigration authorities as her name figured in the blacklist.

Reiterating that the state government was kept in the dark about the earlier visit, Chief Minister M Karunanidhi informed the Assembly today that the Centre has now communicated the official permission to the Indian mission in Malaysia on May 7, a copy of which was received by the government here yesterday.

“Though such matters usually move at a slower pace, the central and state governments moved swiftly, taking into consideration her health condition,” Karunanidhi said.

The High Commission in Malaysia, where Parvathiammal has been staying for the past few months, has been asked to provide her a visa for six months on medical grounds so that the octogenarian could seek treatment in Trichy as per her request — though under certain conditions.

She has been barred from staying anywhere outside the hospital where she is seeking treatment, and only her family members can remain in touch with her — she has to list these relatives. She has also been asked not to contact any political party or organisations that have connections with banned outfits.

These conditions effectively rule out pro-Tiger MDMK leader Vaiko, Tamil activist P Nedumaran and others from contacting her or using her presence to attack the state government, the DMK or the Congress, as the proposed visit coincides with the first anniversary of Prabhakaran’s death and the end of war in Lanka.

Vaiko and Nedumaran were present at the airport when Parvathiammal was deported, and had strongly criticised Karunanidhi and his government over the incident.

Malaysian man aghast after marrying ‘married’ Vietnamese mail order ‘bride’

Kuala Lumpur, May 8 (ANI): A store manager’s dream of marrying a young and beautiful Vietnamese bride was shattered when he found that the girl, recommended by an agent, was already married.

Tan Ching Seng, 30, and his family thought it was worthwhile to fork out RM17,000 for a matchmaking agency when he first saw the woman at the KL International Airport.

“I was excited and was looking forward to a happy marriage. I thought it was God’s gift that I was able to marry this attractive woman,” the Star Online quoted him as saying at a press conference organised by MCA Public Services and Complaints Department head Datuk Michael Chong.

“But I was shocked and didn’t know what to do when she told me that she had already been married in Vietnam in 2006,” he added.

And Tan only came to find out the reality after Nguyen Thi Vinh, 25 – Ah Hoong to Tan’s family – failed to come home on March 10 after returning to Vietnam when her grandmother died.

“When I managed to contact Ah Hoong a month later, she told me the shocking news. She claimed she had been cheated by the agent as she was supposed to come to work in Malaysia and not for marriage,” said Tan.

He added that it was only then that he realised why Ah Hoong always “gave excuses” and “looked sad” when he wanted to sleep with her.

He said Ah Hoong even sent him a copy of her wedding photograph and marriage certificate.

Tan said he now wanted the agents to refund him the fee, which he and his family had borrowed from relatives.

Chong said the department would help Tan take legal action against the agent. (ANI)

Mining company says latest Rosebery heavy metals testing is good news

The owners of a mine on Tasmania’s west coast say the results of water testing at Rosebery should allay residents’ fears about heavy metals poisoning.

Some Rosebery residents are taking legal action against the mining company MMG, claiming mine discharge has made 30 people sick.

The Health Department’s independent investigation ruled out heavy metal poisoning, and last month MMG gave more than 400 mine workers and relatives the all-clear after testing them for metal exposure.

The company used a public meeting on Wednesday (May the 6th) to release more test results.

Mine manager John Lamb says the tests found no elevated metal levels in the town’s water supply, and that the metals are less easily absorbed into the body.

“Results were in line with some work that the EPA did in 2008, in fact generally lower,” he said.

Mr Lamb says the Health Department has been told about elevated lead levels in two water tanks.

The Rosebery Toxic Heavy Metals Taskforce says it will review the results over the next few days.

No arrests made in Pak over botched Times Square bombing plot: Malik

Islamabad, May 6 (ANI): Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik has contradicted media reports over arrests being made in the country in connection with the foiled New York’ Times Square bombing plot.

Talking to reporters before leaving for Beijing, Malik clarified that none of the friends or relatives of Faisal Shehzad, who has been accused of masterminding the bomb attack, have been arrested in Pakistan.

Malik said Islamabad is yet to receive any formal request from Washington to probe the case, The Nation reports.

He termed the bombing plot as a ‘conspiracy against Pakistan’, but added that the government would take stern action against all those involved in the terror plot.

“Pakistan would extend its full support to the US authorities in probing the matter. No one would be allowed to use Pakistan’s territory for any act of terrorism,” Malik said. (ANI)

Erin Andrews ‘stalker’ to serve sentence in Atlanta jail near her home

New York, May 4 (ANI): The man who was convicted of stalking ESPN sportscaster Erin Andrews surrendered Monday at a federal prison in Atlanta—which is apparently his victim’s home city.

Michael Barrett, 48, was originally assigned to a penitentiary in central California, but when he called the prison Saturday to confirm, he was told he was not on the list, a source said.

He was ordered to Atlanta at the last minute, the source said.

Andrews, who said she lives in fear of Barrett, resides in Atlanta”s affluent suburb of Dunwoody.

“He absolutely did not choose to go to Atlanta. He has no friends or family there,” the New York Daily News quoted a source as saying.

Barrett, a divorced insurance executive, was hoping for placement in Oregon or Wisconsin, within driving distance of relatives who might visit, said the source.

According to a prison official, he will get a review within the next 28 days, and can request a transfer, but might not be eligible for 18 months. (ANI)

Indian man sentenced to death by Sharia Court for killing lover’s husband in UAE

Dubai, May 3 (ANI): The Sharia Court of First Instance has sentenced a 27-year-old Indian man to death. The man has been charged with murdering his Indian lover’s husband.

The lover a 26-year-old woman, was not on good terms with her Pakistani husband. He would consume alcohol and mistreat her, she claimed.

According to Gulf News, Police said that three days after the murder, the wife went to the police station with her husband”s photo claiming that he had left home and did not come back.

Further probing revealed that there was marital discord. During questioning, the woman admitted that her boyfriend killed her husband. She said she did not want to kill him and only wanted him beaten up. Her boyfriend was arrested while he was trying to leave the country through Dubai airport.

The boyfriend told the court that he was forced by police to confess. His lawyer told the court that he did not mean to kill the victim.

The family members of the deceased had asked for capital punishment for both the accused but the woman has been sentenced to life imprisonment and paying blood money to the plaintiffs, because she is the mother of the victim’s son. The son is counted amongst the relatives who ask for death penalty.

Under Sharia a son cannot seek capital punishment for his parents.

MJ’s mum asks relatives to vacate California mansion

London, April 28(ANI): Michael Jackson”s mother Katherine has asked her former daughter-in-law Alejandra Genevieve Oaziaza and her children to vacate her California mansion, it has emerged.

The Jackson family matriarch, who won custody of the King of Pop’s children, is apparently having trouble taking care of all her seven grandchildren in the San Fernando Valley house, reports the Daily Star.

According to TMZ.com, Oaziaza, who has two sons by ex-husband Jermaine Jackson and another two kids with Randy Jackson, may now move into a nearby condo, belonging to the family.

Jackson’s kids – Prince Michael, Paris and Blanket- have been living with Katherine, since his death in June last year. (ANI)

Prostate cancer risk increases with number of affected family members

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): The more of a man”s direct relatives, i.e. brothers and fathers, are affected with prostate cancer, the higher is his personal risk to develop the disease himself, claims a study.

Researchers of the department headed by Kari Hemminki at DKFZ have studied how high is an individual person”s risk in familial prostate cancer.

The largest ever such study included 26,651 prostate cancer patients, 5,623 of whom came from families in which the disease had been diagnosed before.

And the researchers calculated that men up to an age of 65 years with three affected brothers have a risk that is 23 times higher than that of the control group (men without affected family members).

Men aged between 65 and 74 years, whose father was or is the only one affected, have a risk that is increased by 1.8 times and, thus, the lowest risk elevation in the familial cancer group.

The DKFZ researchers recognized a general tendency that the personal risk is the higher, the younger affected relatives were at the time of diagnosis.

Elevated familial cancer risks are often doubted.

Critics argue that results tend to be distorted because relatives of affected persons are alarmed and have early detection exams more often than the rest of the population.

Thus, the argument runs, they are more frequently overdiagnosed, because even tumours are found that might never have caused any symptoms during their lifetime.

In order to refute this criticism, the researchers also investigated the prostate cancer mortality in relation to the number of affected family members.

They arrived at the same risk distribution as for newly diagnosed cases—the more direct relatives are affected, the higher is a person”s risk of dying from prostate cancer.

Thus, the scientists have proved that the risk increase is real and not just due to more frequent early detection examinations.

“Our results provide a good guidance for doctors. If a man has several affected relatives who may even have been diagnosed at a young age, then his personal risk is substantially increased. In this case, a family doctor should urgently recommend having an early detection examination,” said study head Kari Hemminki. (ANI)

Tibetans pray for Chinese earthquake victims

Suja (Himachal Pradesh), Apr 24 (ANI): Tibetan students in India offered special prayers for Chinese earthquake victims in Himachal Pradesh’s Suja village.

Over 2,000 people died last week as tremors rocked Qinghai Province.

Tibetans in India expressed shock over the news.

“Ever since this unfortunate incident, we have organized prayers. The Karmapa has visited our school to perform prayers, and recently, they had a private audience with the Dalai Lama. His Holiness is very concerned about what happened to people inside Tibet,” said Namkhang, a teacher at the TCV School in Suja.

Over 40 students of different age groups are reported to have lost their family members and relatives in the tragedy.

The students, offered prayers for the peace of departed souls. (ANI)

Death threats made in manslaughter case

The Northern Territory Supreme Court has heard of death threats made by prisoners against the five men charged with killing an Alice Springs man last July.

Anton Kloeden, Scott Doody, Timothy Hird, Joshua Spears and Glen Swain have been in protective custody on remand at the Alice Springs jail for the past eight months.

All five today pleaded guilty to manslaughter over the fatal assault of Kwementyere Ryder.

The court heard the accused men are only allowed one or two hours a day outside their cells because they need to be kept separated from other prisoners.

Kloedon’s lawyer told the court that his client sees a person dragging a finger across his throat every day as an unmistakable signal.

He said another prisoner claims he will chop off his head and cook him like a kangaroo and has threatened to kill one of Kloedon’s relatives.

The court heard the men, who are in their early 20s, drove through the dry Todd River towards two camps of Aboriginal people early on the morning of July 25 last year after a night of drinking.

They later returned to the river and fatally assaulted Mr Ryder who had thrown a bottle at their utility.

The five men are expected to be sentenced next week.

Remains of WWI diggers identified as brothers

Two relatives of a New South Wales south coast man have been discovered buried in a mass war grave at Fromelles in France.

Shane Tough, from Basin View, says he recently received a call from the Department of Defence with the news.

Two brothers of Mr Tough’s great-grandmother were killed in World War I while serving in the 53rd Battalion.

He says despite his grandmother spending years documenting family history, the discovery came as a surprise.

“It was amazing. I just felt a real sense of being proud about the guys that went over there as Australian fighters and soldiers and in particular those guys that I was related to them,” he said.

Mr Tough says the bodies have been reburied and several family members have been invited to their memorial.

“There will be an inaugural ceremony rightfully fitting for all the soldiers on the 19th of July this year,” he said.

$1 billion in property seized from Mafia clan

Italian police have seized property including apartments and farms worth an estimated $1 billion from a powerful clan of the Camorra crime syndicate based in Naples.

Around 200 police officers swooped on property owned by the heirs of Dante Passarelli, a suspected Camorra chief.

Mr Passarelli fell to his death in mysterious circumstances while he was facing charges in a major anti-Mafia case in 2004.

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi launched a series of initiatives in January to tackle the Mafia, including a national agency to manage confiscated property.

A law passed by the Berlusconi government in 2008 allows seizures from the relatives of Mafia members.